Not as piercingly intimate as the masterful Emily, Alone, but in its breadth it might be wiser and more encompassing. It is about responsibility and community, written with gentle humor and empathy but not an ounce of sentimentality ... How can a novel about getting old, losing friends, growing frail, be anything but depressing? But in O’Nan’s hands it is buoyant and hopeful ... His novels are unexpected and very different from one another. But always, he is a master at quotidian details, a master at human emotion. Always, he writes with a huge and generous heart ... Tender and funny, poignant and true. The novel is a little miracle: here it is, life, on the page.
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